Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

fuse

"fuse" is also a: user

created by spoon00

(thing) by girlotron (2.4 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) Sat Aug 26 2000 at 13:06:31

FUSE: Toooootally cool magazine produced by Neville Brody, amongst others. It's basically a set of experimental typefaces on disk plus a set of posters with ideas for usage. The fonts are uncopyrighted, and users are positively encouraged to change and develop them.
Which is nice, to quote The Fast Show..

Site: http://www.research.co.uk/fuse/issues.html
See: cool fonts

(thing) by WickerNipple (5.4 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) Thu Oct 05 2000 at 19:02:25

First published album by The Cranes - released in 1986. Fuse is now very out of print, all the master tapes have either been lost or destroyed. If anyone happens to have a copy of this album or know where I could find one...

I'll kiss you

Track List:

  1. Pillow Panther
  2. Fuse
  3. Valentine
  4. Gas-Ring
  5. Things That I Like
  6. Wrench
  7. Fracture

(idea) by mkb (3.9 hr) (print)   ?   (I like it!) Wed Oct 10 2001 at 4:15:45

To fuse the ends of a rope, you first need synthetic rope. Hemp rope will certainly not produce the effects you want.

Take the frayed, nasty ends of some synthetic rope (polypropylene or some such rope). Take a match or a lighter. Light your flame. Use the flame to melt the ends of rope into one solid chunk.

This is the biggest advantage of plastic rope. Natural rope is better in many respects, but it must be whipped or spliced at the ends.


FUSE is also a name Richie Hawtin once used as a moniker in the days before Plastikman. It's an acronym for "Futuristic Underground Sound Experiments" or something.
FUSE is also a club in Brussels, in Belgium, home to Technasia.

(thing) by XWiz (58.5 min) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Thu Feb 20 2003 at 18:57:10

This writeup discusses two kinds of fuse: those used in explosives, and those used in electronic devices.

Explosives

In explosives there are a variety of fuses, the simplest of which consists of a rope or cord which has been impregnated with combustible materials. When one end of the fuse is lit the flame will progress along its length at a predetermined and dependable rate. The other end of the fuse is, as anyone will remember from the Road Runner cartoons, attached to the explosive charge. The whole point of the fuse, and the importance of it burning at a constant, dependable rate, becomes obvious here. The person lighting the explosive will require time to achieve a safe distance (or in the aforementioned cartoon, the coyote will require time to ingest or somehow become stuck to the dynamite), and thus a sufficient amount of fuse is left to provide time for anyone in the area to reach safe distance.

The safety fuse, invented in 1831 by a leather merchant called William Bickford, was the first fuse to achieve this dependable timing. It was, compared to its predecessors, astoundingly consistent. Bickford, motivated to reduce the number of accidents in the mines, wrapped a core of black powder in textiles. Later on the cord featured an added waterproof coating, often asphalt, and later on a further outer sleeve of plastic or textile.

Black powder was eventually banned in many mines, and in 1908 the detonating cord made its debut. In many ways this was similar to the safety fuse, but contained high explosive rather than black powder. It was constructed in a rather unnerving manner, in that a large-bore cylinder of lead was filled with molten TNT and allowed to solidify before being passed, repeatedly, through rollers until it had reached the correct diameter. Called, in its native France, cordeau détonant, elsewhere it was merely called cordeau.

In 1936 the American manufacturers of cordeau developed their own version: Primacord. It was based on the French patents and consisted of a core of PETN or RDX surrounded by a variety of textiles, waterproofing and plastic.

Electronics

In electronics, however, a fuse is almost the opposite; rather than causing explosions it is designed to prevent them, being a simple but important safety device. Imagine the bulb from a torch, in which a thin section of wire glows when electricity is passed through it. If too much electricity is passed through the bulb the section of thin wire will melt. The fuse works on a similar principle; a wire or strip of metal, designed to melt when excessive current passes through it, is placed in the circuit. When a potentially dangerous amount of current passes through, the metal in the fuse melts and the circuit is at that point disconnected from the mains. (This is usually a good thing, though occasionally one is led to wonder whether fuses are designed specifically to blow at critical moments during television programmes or when you're just about to finish the penultimate level of Tomb Raider.)


(thing) by phraggle (2.3 wk) (print)   ?   (I like it!) Fri Mar 28 2003 at 0:50:57

The Fuse is a chocolate bar Cadbury have been selling for the past few years. It consists of Chocolate, Raisins, Cereal, Peanuts and Fudge Pieces, tightly bonded together into a bar coated in chocolate.

Fuse is one of my favorite chocolate bars. Biting into it, you get a (for want of a less cliched term) "Taste Explosion". As well as chocolate, you get the taste of fruit and nut, and also.... fudge pieces. Mmmmm... Fudge pieces....

Nutritional Information:
Per Bar:
Energy: 1000 kJ/ 240kcal
Protein: 3.5g
Carbohydrate: 29.2g
Fat: 12.0g
Per 100g:
Energy: 2045 kJ/ 490kcal
Protein: 7.2g
Carbohydrate: 59.6g
Fat: 24.5g


(definition) by Webster 1913 (print) Tue Dec 21 1999 at 23:48:54

Fuse (fUz), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Fused (fUzd); p. pr. & vb. n. Fusing.] [L. fusus, p. p. of fundere to pour, melt, cast. See Foundo to cast, and cf. Futile.]

1.

To liquefy by heat; to render fluid; to dissolve; to melt.

2.

To unite or blend, as if melted together.

Whose fancy fuses old and new.
Tennyson.

 

© Webster 1913


Fuse, v. i.

1.

To be reduced from a solid to a fluid state by heat; to be melted; to melt.

2.

To be blended, as if melted together.

Fusing point, the degree of temperature at which a substance melts; the point of fusion.

 

© Webster 1913


Fuse, n. [For fusee, fusil. See 2d Fusil.] (Gunnery, Mining, etc.)

A tube or casing filled with combustible matter, by means of which a charge of powder is ignited, as in blasting; -- called also fuzee. See Fuze.

Fuse hole, the hole in a shell prepared for the reception of the fuse. Farrow.

 

© Webster 1913


Fuse, or Fuze , n. (Elec.)

A wire, bar, or strip of fusible metal inserted for safety in an electric circuit. When the current increases beyond a certain safe strength, the metal melts, interrupting the circuit and thereby preventing possibility of damage.

 

© Webster 1913


Fuse, or Fuze, plug .

1. (Ordnance)

A plug fitted to the fuse hole of a shell to hold the fuse.

2.

A fusible plug that screws into a receptacle, used as a fuse in electric wiring.

 

© Webster 1913


printable version
chaos

Precisely bent paperclip Neville Brody sparkler bomb Fuses versus circuit breakers
suicide diode UK confectionery items exploding console PETN
fused plug The Fast Show Philadelphia Experiment Making the Movies XXXV Taking Films Under the Sea
black powder Fuze typeface Something
torch The reaction of my body: realizing its own impossibility, model rocket Crosley Radio Corporation
GmailFS Ground tree dynamite Space Duel
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help

Cool Staff Picks
Just another sprinkling of indeterminacy
ekpyrotic universe
Protocols of the Meetings of the Learned Elders of Zion
Pithing the frog
beekeeping
I will be the first thing you will be thinking about after you wake
yo-yo
Prostatitis
citizen's arrest
Walther PPK
Virginia Woolf
plastic injection molding
The Constitution of the United States of America
The White Butterfly
New Writeups
sam512
halfway homes, catacombs, twilight zones(fiction)
Timeshredder
The Texas UFO Crash of 1897(event)
Heitah
The Dark Knight(review)
ignis_glaciesque
Uppsala(place)
ignis_glaciesque
diffusion of responsibility(idea)
TheOrientalAfrican
The Soft Meadow of my Childhood(event)
BookReader
The Dragon Slayers(fiction)
kohlcass
religiously fashionable(review)
Pavlovna
waulking song(thing)
tentative
Stick Man(poetry)
Ereneta
The Fight with the Snapping Turtle: Or, the American St. George(poetry)
sitaraika
Fog and fire(personal)
MonoliTheory
She sobs in response(fiction)
kohlcass
Arzu(person)
Clarke
Duster(fiction)
E2 is a by-product of the existence of The Everything Development Company